This article is more than 1 year old
Labour’s
big Farage problem has a simple solution: build, build, build
This
article is more than 1 year old John Harris
John
Harris
It’s not
immigration or lack of services fuelling Reform UK’s impressive gains in the
polls, but lack of social housing. Huge investment is needed now
Sun 8 Dec
2024 12.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/dec/08/labour-housing-crisis-reform-uk
At last
week’s Spectator parliamentarian of the year awards, Nigel Farage took the
stage in front of a large chunk of the Westminster establishment, including
journalists in need of a story. Honoured with a seat next to the magazine’s new
proprietor, he was there to receive the newcomer of the year trophy and deliver
a pithy speech written to spread fear through his audience. And so it proved.
“We are about to witness a political revolution the likes of which we have not
seen since Labour after the first world war,” he said. “Politics is about to
change in the most astonishing way. Newcomers will win the next election. Thank
you very much.” Although booze and seasonal merriment were in plentiful supply,
his words were reportedly greeted by a brief outbreak of complete silence.
And then
came an equally sobering opinion poll. A somewhat obscure outfit called
FindOutNow gave the Tories the lead on a mere 26% – but the big headline was
about Farage’s party, Reform UK, rising to second place on 24%, one point
higher than Labour. In response, you could feel the government’s anxiety levels
spiking – whereupon Farage made yet another appearance on BBC One’s Question
Time and capped a week of mouthwatering promotion.
Developments
in the real world show that Reform’s latest growth spurt should be taken very
seriously indeed. The party says it now has about 100,000 members. It boasts of
a rising appeal among young men: Farage cites his million TikTok followers, and
the fact that half of them are under 25. In Wales, it fancies its chances of
becoming the main opposition to Labour. Scotland, where there has long been a
rather deluded assumption that hard-right politics will never find any space,
has recently seen a run of council byelections in which the party won
creditable vote-shares: 18% in one contest in Glasgow, and 26% in the
Brexit-supporting port of Fraserburgh.
Meanwhile,
Reform’s profile on its English home turf continues to skyrocket. The UK
Independence party’s members tended to be too consumed by Brexit ideology to be
interested in the small change of grassroots campaigning. Now, although Farage
still specialises in broad-sweep rhetoric, his footsoldiers are dutifully
learning the argot of potholes and dog mess. In July, Reform came second in 98
parliamentary constituencies, the vast majority of which are held by Labour
MPs. In such near-miss seats as Amber Valley (in Derbyshire), Barnsley South
and Easington in County Durham, they are now plotting its careful, somewhat
boring path to victory.
While
party members look ahead to next May’s local elections, the national picture
gives Reform boost after boost. Its latest uptick was undoubtedly triggered by
news of net migration reaching a record 900,000. Rachel Reeves’s misfiring
budget has also helped. At the same time, as I wrote last week, Keir Starmer
and his comrades continue to speak the cold language of transactional politics,
constantly fixating on figures and statistics. There is almost no “we” or “us”
in what they offer, and Faragism is filling the void. But most of all, Reform
is prospering because too many people are in the same political and economic
rut where they have been marooned for decades.
Back in
2016, my former Guardian colleague Gary Younge pointed out that in lots of
places, the choice presented by the Brexit referendum had been simple: a vote
in favour of the status quo, or the chance to put your cross in a box that
might as well have been labelled “fuck it”. Eight years on, far too many
people’s political choices still seem to boil down to the same binary. The
“levelling up” drive that began with Theresa May amounted to almost nothing.
The new government has made a few moves in the right direction: witness the
recent announcement that the funding of councils by Whitehall will finally be
tilted in favour of more deprived areas of the country. There again, that is
not an offer of success, but merely continued survival. People expect much
more, and they are completely right to do so.
There is
one huge issue I have always encountered while reporting from so many of the
places now leaning Reform’s way: coastal towns, the parts of outer-east London
that blur into Essex, the pancake-flat Fens beyond, and the old coalfields of
the East Midlands, South Yorkshire and the south Welsh valleys. On a huge
number of occasions, once conversations have got through immigration and the
threadbare state of local public services, people have concentrated on one
inescapable subject: housing, and how its scarcity compares with a past of
relative plenty, which is exactly the kind of contrast that Reform trades on.
Four
decades ago, many of Reform UK’s older supporters had their lives transformed
by Margaret Thatcher’s policy of encouraging people to buy their council houses
at huge discounts; now, their daughters, sons and grandchildren live with the
dire housing crisis that policy caused. If you understand at least some of the
rising ire about immigration as fear of even more competition for scarce
resources, housing is right at its heart: in my experience, no other issue
comes near its impact on everyday life.
In among
the mess of numbers and statistics scattered through Starmer’s recent “plan for
change” speech was the government’s oft-repeated aim of overseeing the building
of 1.5m new homes (which even Labour councils have condemned as “wholly
unrealistic”). As usual, how many of these will be rented from councils and
housing associations remains lamentably unclear: there is talk of about 30,000
a year being constructed, but that is scarcely more than a third of what is
reckoned to be needed. The government, it seems, is largely sticking to New
Labour-ish visions of swing voters in commuter towns who have the means to join
the property-owning democracy. But post-Brexit politics has a new and very
different element: a large part of the threat from Reform centres on areas of
post-industrial Britain where people’s needs are much more urgent.
There is
a way that could conceivably be addressed, and it would fit the Treasury’s
insistence that large-scale public spending has to fit the definition of
investment. Set aside large plots of land for mixed developments based around
large amounts of social housing with lifelong tenure. Announce start-dates for
building, and roll out apprenticeships and further education courses that will
bring a lot of the work involved to local people. Badge the whole thing up as
the final arrival of what some people called levelling up; frame it as a return
to tradition and brand it with union jacks, if necessary. And as you sell the
idea, try to update the kind of plain-spoken, communitarian words once spoken
by that great Labour god Aneurin Bevan: “We shall persist in the building of
new permanent houses until every family in the country has a good, separate,
modern home.”
By modern
standards, that might sound impossibly ambitious. But as Farage well knows, the
same was once true of the vast, unwieldy, confounding project that he
successfully sold to the country, before Brexit collided with reality, and he
washed his hands of it. If Labour wants to even begin to see him off, this is
surely how it should start.
John
Harris is a Guardian columnist

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